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Consulting

The Consulting Cover Letter

by Stephan Spijkers Leave a Comment

Before you even get to the case interviews to which this blog is dedicated, you’ll have to apply to the firm you’d like to work for. When applying for a consulting firm such as McKinsey or BCG, you’ll probably be asked to send them three things:

  1. A cover letter
  2. Your resume
  3. Your grades from high school and university

Aside from falsification, there is little you can do about nr.3 on this list, so we will focus on the cover letter and resume. Since so much can (and does) go wrong with these basic elements of your application I’ll cover both on this blog, starting with the cover letter.

 

The first step

Let’s first debunk a myth here: sending your application to the firm’s recruitment manager is not the first step in the interviewing process. At least, it should not be, even though it is the case for 90% of applicants. Your application process should start with networking: visiting recruitment events, having coffee with consultants and searching through the alumni network of your university for (ex-)consultants. All with the goal of having your application recommended by one of these people. Even if they aren’t able to recommend you, you can still refer to these meetings in your cover letter, easily differentiating you from 90% of the applicants who did not take this opportunity.

 

The 30-second rule

Referring to a previous event or a (former) employee shows you did your research and directly sets you apart from the rest of the applicants, who send typical letters in which they link personal characteristic X to firm benefit Y. Since these companies get hundreds and sometimes thousands of applications each month, not every cover letter is read: they are scanned. So don’t expect them to read a four-page document in which you elaborate on why you are the perfect consultant. You just proved them otherwise. The limited timeframe is why (positive!) differentiation is so important: you only get 30 seconds to prove you need to be invited for the interview.

 

Step into their shoes

So, every application gets about 30 seconds worth of attention. Those 30 seconds will determine whether your application ends up on the ‘reject’ or the ‘invite’ pile. You’ll want to make that decision as easy as possible for the person scanning your cover letter. Think about the poor guy sifting through those endless piles of boring letters, trying to decide whether every candidate is a consultant or not in a minute or less (or do you want to spend the evening reading these letters as well?). How would you feel? What would the perfect cover letter look like?

 

The perfect cover letter is one in which the decision is made easy, where you can be sure that rejecting candidate X with the 7 page cover letter saves both the firm and the candidate precious time and where candidate Y has to be invited to the interview because we risk losing his or her talent to a competitor. So you need to do two things in your cover letter:

  • Stand out
  • Communicate effectively

There are multiple ways of standing out from the crowd and differentiate from the bulk of applicants (in both negative and positive ways). In my book I discuss five proven methods in great detail and help you secure that interview invitation. In our next post, we’ll focus on that other important document that you send with each application: your resume.

Good luck!

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Consulting, Consulting Cover Letter, Cover letter, Resume, Strategy Consulting

Math can break your case interview and how to prevent it.

by Stephan Spijkers Leave a Comment

 

So, without using a calculator: what is 40 x 36? What is 12,5% of 160? What percentage is $ 2 million of $ 14 million? If we sell product A 5.000 times for $ 1,49 a piece, what is our revenue?

You should be prepared to answer questions like these during your case interviews, whether they are part of the case you’re solving or fired at you by the interviewer in an attempt to test your quantitative skills. All without the use of a calculator. So why is the interviewer looking for skills you probably have not used since elementary school and in a world with calculators in every mobile phone?

 

The importance of math

First of all, being able to calculate both fast and correctly in your head is of great value in the consulting world. You’ll deal with large sets of numbers on a daily basis and being able to calculate these numbers without cranking out a calculator every time just saves lots of time. It will also help you get a sense of the magnitude of these numbers:

I always want to know how an interviewee reacts to large numbers. Does he or she calculate them with ease? Does the candidate grasp the effects of a cost saving, for example? A cost saving of $ 0,56 per product might not look like much, but what if we produce 9,5 million each day? I want a future consultant to grasp the magnitude of these numbers, which is difficult at best if you need that calculator every time.

It helps finding mistakes in calculations, caused by a typo during a late-night spreadsheet marathon, for example. Is the total yearly market for running shoes in the US really only $ 2 million a year?

Secondly, being able to calculate quickly in your head looks good in front of the client and prevents embarrassing mistakes. The interviewer wants to know whether he can take you to that client presentation and rely on your performance if a client asks you what the effects would be if they increased prices by 15 %.

 

Getting your math skills up to par

So, you probably haven’t been calculating in your head since elementary school, but you do want that job in consulting: what to do? Unfortunately, there’s no easy way out: calculating in your head is a skill and the only way to improve it is by practicing it over and over again. You’ve probably ditched the old math books, but luckily there are plenty of great resources online. Below, we’ll go through some of them.

 

Kofprechnen Trainieren

A tool you can download and use offline, if you wish. Even though it’s in German, the software is pretty straightforward. A great way to practice that I’ve used myself and unlimited arithmetic fun!

 

SIKORE

A tool you can use both offline and online, doesn’t feature a time component, but if you’re on a Mac and can’t use Kopfrechnen, this is a great alternative.

 

Youtube: Math Tricks

This video series teaches you some handy math tricks and is worth a look. Changing the techniques you use for calculus might lead to confusion during the interview, so if you only have one week to prepare for the interview, I suggest sticking to your owntrusted methods. Secondly, this video links to a (paid) teaching method that I do not endorse.

[tube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLdKsKep1og [/tube]

Good luck with practicing!

– Stephan

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: basics, Case Interview, case interview math, Consulting, Strategy Consulting

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